Curriculum Vitae Jason S

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Curriculum Vitae Jason S Curriculum Vitae Jason S. Goldstein Jason Seth Goldstein, PhD. Research Director Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve (NOAA-OCM) Research Department, Maine Coastal Ecology Center 342 Laudholm Farm Road Wells, Maine 04090 Phone: (207) 646.1555 (x136) Email: [email protected] Web: http://www.wellsreserve.org ACADEMIC TRAINING 2012-2014 U.S. Fulbright Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship, University of Haifa, Israel 2012 Ph.D. (Zoology) University of New Hampshire 2007 M.S. (Marine Ecology) Old Dominion University 2000 C.M.S. (Museum Studies and Administration) Harvard University Extension School 1993 B.S. (Biology) University of Massachusetts Dartmouth PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS 2016-current Research Director, Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve (NOAA-OCM) 2021-current Affiliate Research Professor, University of New Hampshire, School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering (SMSOE) & Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space (EOS) 2015-current Adjunct Assistant Professor, York County Community College 2014-2015 Assistant Professor, Eastern Connecticut State University (1-yr faculty appointment) ACADEMIC HONORS & AWARDS 2012-2014 Fulbright Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Leon Recanati Institute for Maritime Studies, Department of Maritime Civilizations, University of Haifa, Israel 2011-2012 NOAA National Estuarine Reserve Research (NERRS) Fellowship, Great Bay Estuary 2011 George M. Moore Scholarship Fund, Univ. New Hampshire 2008 Crustacean Society Graduate Fellowship in Ecology 2007-2010 Graduate Teaching Fellowships, Univ. New Hampshire 2003 NSF East Asia Fellowship, National Fisheries Research Center, Japan PUBLICATIONS IN REVIEW & PREPARATION _________ Burdick, D., C. Peter, J. Goldstein, M. Tyrrell, K. Raposa, B. Fischella, J. Allen. (in-prep). Changes in plant communities associated with sea level rise across New England salt marshes. Dorrance, A.N., J.S. Goldstein, J.T. Carloni, B.C. Gutzler, and W.H. Watson III. (submitted). Sublethal behavioral and physiological effects of claw removal on Jonah Crabs (Cancer borealis) Zarrella Smith, K., J. Woodall, A. Ryan, N.B. Furey, and J.S. Goldstein. (submitted). Characterizing seasonal movements of the invasive green crab, Carcinus maenas, in an estuary using acoustic telemetry. Biological Invasions. 1 Curriculum Vitae Jason S. Goldstein Gutzler, B.C, N.N. Spada, S. Sykes, J.S. Goldstein, and W.H.Watson III. (in-review). Ocean acidification impairs the ability of American lobsters (Homarus americanus) to respond to food odors. Scientific Reports. Goldstein, J.S., and Carloni, J.T. (in-review). Assessing the implications of live claw removal on Jonah crab (Cancer borealis), an emerging fishery in the Northwest Atlantic. Fisheries Research. PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS (34) Crane, L.C., J.S. Goldstein, D. Thomas, K. Rexroth, and A. Watts. 2021. Effects of life state on eDNA detection of the invasive European green crab (Carcinus maenas) in estuarine systems. Ecological Indicators. 124: 107412. Carloni, J.T., J.S. Goldstein, and W.H. Watson III. 2021. Movement and activity patterns of acoustically-monitored egg-bearing American lobsters, Homarus americanus. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 661: 163-173. Goldstein, J.S. and E. Spanier. 2020. Potential effects of elevated temperature on seasonal movements in slipper lobsters, Scyllarides latus (Latreille, 1803), in the eastern Mediterranean. Mediterranean Marine Science. 21: doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/mms.22074. Moore, E.M., T.G. Langley, J.S. Goldstein, and W.H. Watson III. 2020. American lobster, Homarus americanus, reproduction and recruitment in a New England Estuary. Estuaries & Coasts. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-020-00759-4. Goldstein, J.S., T. Matthews, H. Matsuda, F. Abe, and T. Yamakawa. 2019. Development of larval spotted spiny lobster Panulirus guttatus (Latreille, 1804) in culture. J. Crustacean Biology. 39: 574-581. doi:10.1093/jcbiol/ruz055. Raposa, K.B., J.S. Goldstein, K. Wilson-Grimes, J. Mora, P. Stacey, and R.A. McKinney. 2019. A comparative assessment of salt marsh crabs (Decapoda: Brachyura) across the National Estuarine Research Reserves in New England, USA. J. Crustacean Biology. 40: 67-75. doi:10.1093/jcbiol/ruz083. Furbeck, M.E., L.W. Pollock, J.W. Miller, and J.S. Goldstein. 2019. Presence of tholicthys-stage Spotfin Butterflyfish, Chaetodon ocellatus (Chaetodontidate) in a southern Maine estuary, Gulf of Maine. Northeast Naturalist. 26: N52-N55. Wasson, K., K. Raposa, M. Almeida, K. Beheshti, J. Crooks, A. Deck, N. Dix, M. Ferner, J. Goldstein, D. Johnson, S. Lerberg, P. Marcum, C. Peter, B. Puckett, J. Schmitt, E. Smith, K. St. Laurent, K. Swanson, M. Tyrrell, and R. Guy. 2019. Pattern and scale: evaluating generalities in crab distributions and marsh dynamics from small plots to a national scale. Ecology. e02813. 10.1002/ecy.2813. Goldstein, J.S. and W.H. Watson III. 2019. Biochemical changes throughout early- and middle- stages of embryogenesis in lobsters (Homarus americanus) under varying thermal regimes. Peer-J. 7:e6952 http://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6952. 2 Curriculum Vitae Jason S. Goldstein Lavalli, K.L., C.N. Malcom, and J.S. Goldstein. 2018. Description of pereiopod setae of Scyllarid lobsters, Scyllarides aequinoctialis, S. latus, and S. nodifer, with observations on the feeding during consumption of bivalves and gastropods. Bulletin of Marine Science. 94: 571-601. Jury, S.H., T.G. Langley, B.C. Gutzler, J.S. Goldstein, and W.H. Watson III. 2018. Monitoring the behavior of freely moving lobsters with accelerometers. Bulletin of Marine Science. 94: 533– 553. Goldstein, J.S. and J.D. Shields. 2018. Bait-subsidized diets and their effects on ovigerous American lobsters (Homarus americanus). Aquaculture International. 26: 1311-1326. Clark, A.S., S.H. Jury, J.S. Goldstein, T.G. Langley, and W.H. Watson III. 2018. Underwater video surveillance of American lobsters (Homarus americanus) to understand saturation levels in lobster traps. Fishery Bulletin. 116: 161-170. Watson, W.H. III, J.S. Goldstein, E.M. Morrissey, H.A. Cole, and T.L. Pugh. 2017. Evidence of mating by sexually immature female American lobsters Homarus americanus (H. Milne Edwards, 1837) (Decapoda: Nephropidae). J. Crustacean Biology. 37: 2-6. Goldstein, J.S., E.M. Morrissey, E.D. Moretti, and W.H. Watson III. 2017. A comparison of the distribution and abundance of European green crabs and American lobsters in Great Bay Estuary, New Hampshire, USA. Fisheries Research. 189: 10-17. Canto-García, A.A., J.S. Goldstein, E. Sosa-Cordero, and L. Carrillo. 2016. Abundance and spatial distribution of Panulirus spp. phyllosomas off the coast of the Mexican Caribbean. Bulletin of Marine Science. 92: 207-227. Goldstein, J.S. and W.H. Watson III. 2015a. Seasonal movements of American lobsters in southern Gulf of Maine coastal waters: Patterns, environmental triggers, and implications for larval release. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 524: 197-211. doi: 10.3354/meps11192. Goldstein, J.S. and W.H. Watson III. 2015b. Quantifying the influence of natural inshore and offshore thermal regimes on egg development in the North American lobster, Homarus americanus. Biological Bulletin. 228: 1-12. Goldstein, J.S., E.A. Dubofsky, and E. Spanier. 2015. Into a rhythm: Diel activity patterns and behavior in Mediterranean slipper lobsters, Scyllarides latus. ICES Journal of Marine Science. doi: 10.1093/icesjms/fsv008. Spanier, E., K.L. Lavalli, J.S. Goldstein, and 14 other co-authors. 2015. A concise review of lobster utilization by worldwide human populations from prehistory to the modern era. ICES Journal of Marine Science. doi: 10.1093/icesjms/fsv066. Clark, A.S., S.H. Jury, J.S. Goldstein, T.G. Langley, and W.H. Watson. 2015. A comparison of American lobster size structure and abundance using standard and ventless traps. Fisheries Research. 167: 243-251. Goldstein, J.S., T.L. Pugh, E.A. Dubofsky, K.L. Lavalli, M. Clancy, and W.H. Watson. 2014. A non- invasive method for in-situ determination of mating success in female American lobsters (Homarus americanus). J. Visualized Experiments. 84: e50498. doi:10.3791/50498. 3 Curriculum Vitae Jason S. Goldstein Pugh, T., J.S. Goldstein, K. Lavalli, M. Clancy, and W.H. Watson III. 2013. At-sea determination of female American lobster (Homarus americanus) mating activity: Patterns vs. expectations. Fisheries Research. 147: 327-337. Johnson, K.J., J.S. Goldstein, and W.H. Watson III. 2011. Two methods for determining the fertility status in early-stage American lobster, Homarus americanus, eggs. J. Crustacean Biology. 31: 693-700. Butler, M.J. IV, C.B. Paris, J.S. Goldstein, H. Matsuda, and R.K. Cowen. 2011. Behavior constrains the dispersal of long-lived spiny lobster larvae. Marine Ecology Progress Series. 422: 223– 237. Goldstein, J.S. and B. Nelson. 2011. Application of a gelatinous zooplankton tank for the mass production of larval Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus. Aquatic Living Resources. 24: 45-51. Goldstein, J.S. and M.J. Butler IV. 2009. Behavioral enhancement of onshore transport by postlarval Caribbean spiny lobster (Panulirus argus). Limnology and Oceanography. 54: 1669-1678. Goldstein, J.S., H. Matsuda, T. Takenouchi, and M.J. Butler IV. 2008. The complete development of larval Caribbean spiny lobster Panulirus argus (Latreille, 1804) in culture. Journal Crustacean Biology. 28: 306-327. Tlusty, M., A. Kim, E. Malkin, J.S. Goldstein, D. Fiore, and M. Koneval. 2008. Microecological impacts of global warming on crustaceans– temperature induced shifts in the distribution
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